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Keyword: behavior

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  • 'Suspicious activity,' 'concerning behavior' to be monitored at OSU

    10/08/2009 5:27:54 AM PDT · by SoonerStorm09 · 7 replies · 540+ views
    The Daily O'Collegian ^ | October 8, 2009 | Sean Harkin
    The Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg, Va., forever changed after the events of April 16, 2007. A student, Seung-Hui Cho, gunned down 27 students and five faculty members before killing himself. Vice President of Student Affairs Lee Bird said shortly after the Virginia Tech incident, OSU expanded its Threat Assessment Team and renamed it the Behavioral Consultation Team. The team is a specially trained group of professional staff members from several university departments with mental health, student development, law enforcement, academic, administrative and legal expertise, according to its Web site. The team investigates and evaluates threats and other concerning behavior...
  • EU funding 'Orwellian' artificial intelligence plan to monitor public for 'abnormal behaviour'

    09/22/2009 7:13:59 PM PDT · by Cindy · 23 replies · 1,368+ views
    TELEGRAPH.co.uk ^ | Published: 9:08PM BST 19 Sep 2009 | Ian Johnston
    "EU funding 'Orwellian' artificial intelligence plan to monitor public for "abnormal behaviour" The European Union is spending millions of pounds developing "Orwellian" technologies designed to scour the internet and CCTV images for "abnormal behaviour"." SNIPPET: "A five-year research programme, called Project Indect, aims to develop computer programmes which act as "agents" to monitor and process information from web sites, discussion forums, file servers, peer-to-peer networks and even individual computers. Its main objectives include the "automatic detection of threats and abnormal behaviour or violence"." SNIPPET: "Project Indect, which received nearly £10 million in funding from the European Union, involves the Police...
  • No more reckless behavior: Obama warns Wall Street (uhh, straighten Up! uhh, Fly right..uhhhh..OK?)

    09/14/2009 10:42:33 AM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 26 replies · 900+ views
    AFP on Yahoo ^ | 9/14/09 | AFP
    NEW YORK (AFP) – US President Barack Obama on Monday warned Wall Street it must not return to the "reckless behavior" and "unchecked excess" which he blamed for unleashing the global financial crisis. The president, in a major economic speech at the heart of the mighty US financial system just blocks from the New York Stock Exchange, laid out a wide ranging prescription for rebuilding the US finance system. He said the crisis was a "collective failure" of Washington, Wall Street and across America, vowed to press G20 powers for action on regulatory reform, and cautioned top executives not to...
  • Chuck E. Cheese's hunting related video games causing bad behavior by patrons?

    07/24/2009 7:57:26 PM PDT · by greatdefender · 17 replies · 934+ views
    Buffalo News ^ | 23 July 2009 | Sandra Tan
    ome Amherst Town Board members question whether Chuck E. Cheese’s really is the place “where a kid can be a kid.” In a 3-3 vote this week, the board failed to approve a game license for the kids-themed food and entertainment venue on Harlem Road, citing concerns about violent video games and bad behavior by patrons that require police intervention. Council Member Shelly Schratz said she was disturbed by several “action-packed shoot-and-kill games” that were accessible to children as young as 4. “When I see 6-year-olds, 8-year-olds playing those games, when all the time we’re opening the paper and seeing...
  • Chief Wray, You Have Mail ("Our youth are our future – and it doesn't look good.")

    07/23/2009 9:59:56 PM PDT · by fight_truth_decay · 9 replies · 596+ views
    DailyPage ^ | Wednesday 07/22/2009 | David Blaska
    I am a big fan of Madison Police Chief Noble Wray. The man must walk a tightrope between an ultra-liberal Common Council, an increasingly restive population of crime and quality of life victims, and — I suspect — the better instincts of his own uniformed officers. Nonetheless, the chief whacked a hornet's nest when he was quoted in Monday's Wisconsin State Journal thusly: In some cases, long-time residents of some neighborhoods are afraid of young blacks and Hispanics who are not breaking the law. In those cases, the newcomers to a neighborhood may need to adjust their behavior, and long-time...
  • Senator Al Franken: Goodbye to the Class Clown

    07/06/2009 11:33:21 AM PDT · by MplsSteve · 45 replies · 1,310+ views
    Minneapolis StarTribune (aka The Red Star) ^ | 7/04/09 | Kevin Diaz/Pat Doyle - Staff Reporters
    After Al Franken is sworn in to the U.S. Senate this week, the nation will be watching to see how the former entertainer performs in a theater where cooperation trumps controversy and wise politicians survive wiseguys. Preparing for his new role, one of the first people Franken sought out was Tamara Luzzatto, chief of staff for Hillary Clinton when she was in the Senate. "A number of people have told me to study the Hillary model of being a senator," Franken said after they met last February. "Put your head down and do the work." Franken appears determined to establish...
  • How Obama Is Using the Science of Change

    05/07/2009 6:04:58 AM PDT · by Tawiskaro · 10 replies · 420+ views
    Time Magazine ^ | Apr. 02, 2009 | Michael Grunwald
    Two weeks before Election Day, Barack Obama's campaign was mobilizing millions of supporters; it was a bit late to start rewriting get-out-the-vote (GOTV) scripts. "BUT, BUT, BUT," deputy field director Mike Moffo wrote to Obama's GOTV operatives nationwide, "What if I told you a world-famous team of genius scientists, psychologists and economists wrote down the best techniques for GOTV scripting?!?! Would you be interested in at least taking a look? Of course you would!!" ...
  • Hilton Head woman tries to save 'Big Al,' the alligator

    04/28/2009 5:58:56 AM PDT · by Peter Horry · 24 replies · 4,653+ views
    The State ^ | Apr. 28, 2009 | LIZ MITCHELL
    To some, he's known as "Big Al." Others call him"Norm." He's a 10-foot-long alligator who has earned such nicknames because of his intimidating size. It's his size that now has some worried he could be a danger, while others work to save his life. "Big Al" or "Norm", depending on whom you ask, a large alligator in a Hilton Head lagoon that has some residents worried, and others determined to save. For years, the reptile lived in a lagoon near Port Royal Plantation on Hilton Head Island. That's where he became known as "Big Al." Last week, though, he went...
  • Darwin--Unwittingly a "Creationist"

    04/19/2009 8:00:09 AM PDT · by GodGunsGuts · 25 replies · 726+ views
    Answers Magazine ^ | Jason Lisle, Ph.D.
    Evolutionists often attempt to use observational science—arguments from biology, paleontology, geology, or even astronomy—to support their belief. But the really interesting thing is that they base all their arguments on principles that ultimately come from biblical creation! As strange as it may sound, evolutionists must unwittingly assume that creation is true in order to argue against it. That means that Darwin was (in a sense) a “creationist.” All evolutionists must borrow the principles of biblical creation in order to do science (even though they would deny this). Here is why...
  • Hey Party Girls: Guys find appeal in girls who DON'T booz it

    03/10/2009 7:58:50 AM PDT · by lakeprincess · 88 replies · 3,177+ views
    The Washington Times ^ | 3/10/09 | Jennifer Harper
    The naughty cachet of "Girls Gone Wild" has lost its luster says new study: College men actually don t want their women to be drunk, topless, disorderly. Just like mother told you, ladies....
  • Vatican: Gay `behavior' in seminaries declines

    01/16/2009 4:14:20 PM PST · by Maelstorm · 18 replies · 1,860+ views
    http://www.google.com/ ^ | Jan 15,2009 | By RACHEL ZOLL
    NEW YORK (AP) — A Vatican evaluation of U.S. Roman Catholic seminaries in response to the clergy sex abuse scandal concluded that administrators have largely been effective in rooting out "homosexual behavior" in the schools, although the agency said it persists. The Congregation for Catholic Education sought a broad review of how the schools screen and educate prospective priests, but gave special attention to teachings on chastity and celibacy. The Vatican also directed evaluators to look for "evidence of homosexuality" in the schools. In a report U.S. bishops released this week, the Vatican agency noted past "difficulties in the area...
  • When A Woman Isn't In The Mood: Part II (Female Nature, Sex And Men Alert)

    12/29/2008 11:11:17 PM PST · by goldstategop · 523 replies · 10,231+ views
    Townhall.com ^ | 12/30/2008 | Dennis Prager
    n Part I, I made the argument that any woman who is married to a good man and who wants a happy marriage ought to consent to at least some form of sexual relations as much as possible. (Men need to understand that intercourse should not necessarily be the goal of every sexual encounter.) In Part II, I advance the argument that a wife should do so even when she is not in the mood for sexual relations. I am talking about mood, not about times of emotional distress or illness. Why? Here are eight reasons for a woman not...
  • It's a gene thing: Bad boys hardwired to be bad

    12/23/2008 12:02:35 PM PST · by lakeprincess · 53 replies · 1,646+ views
    The Washington Times ^ | 12/23/08 | Jennifer Harper
    "Bad boys" have a bad boy gene. What's more, that same gene makes them more popular than the proverbial Mr. Nice Guy. Hello James Dean, so long Alan Alda
  • Stressed-out mice reveal role of epigenetics in behavior

    12/11/2008 9:23:23 PM PST · by neverdem · 3 replies · 334+ views
    biologynews.net ^ | December 11, 2008 | NA
    Research conducted by a team in Switzerland suggests that a family of genes involved in regulating the expression of other genes in the brain is responsible for helping us deal with external inputs such as stress. Their results, appearing in the December 11 advance online version of the journal Neuron, may also give a clue to why some people are more susceptible to anxiety or depression than others. The researchers from EPFL and the National Competence Center "Frontiers in Genetics" studied the role of a family of genes known as KRAB-ZFP, which acts like a group of genetic censors, selectively...
  • Whatever You Believe About Homosexuality, Say It Kindly

    11/25/2008 5:21:48 AM PST · by Invisigoth · 47 replies · 1,058+ views
    North Star Writers Group ^ | November 25, 2008 | Nathaniel Shockey
    When I asked people why or why not they thought homosexuality was a choice, I asked for specificity and examples, so unless it was especially funny or insightful, I included only the best of the feedback that stayed within the guidelines. Let’s get to it. “Every truly gay friend I’ve ever had believes he was born that way. They say they knew as early as they could remember that it was same-sex people who made their hearts beat faster.” “I think you’re born that way. Too many kids I knew growing up came out of the closet when they left...
  • Is Homosexuality Chosen or Innate? You Tell Me

    11/24/2008 8:55:18 AM PST · by Invisigoth · 149 replies · 2,413+ views
    North Star Writers Group ^ | November 24, 2008 | Nathaniel Shockey
    The real problem with the gay marriage issue is that the truth can only be found in either the spiritual or the scientific. The question that matters most is whether or not a person can be born gay. And the only possible way to answer this seems to be by discovering a gene that determines sexual preference or by believing in the Bible’s condemnation of homosexuality and assuming this means everyone is born straight. Simply posing the question generally infuriates gays. First, the question seems to carry with it the tone that homosexuality is some sort of handicap, like asking...
  • Exclusive: Obama’s Disrespectful Behavior at Ground Zero

    09/16/2008 1:57:43 PM PDT · by Nachum · 42 replies · 308+ views
    Familysecuritymatters.org ^ | September 15, 2008 | Ben Shapiro
    It is difficult to screw up an appearance at Ground Zero on September 11th. You have to be either completely oblivious or completely indifferent. It is a signal feat of idiocy. And yet Barack Obama accomplished it. John McCain and Obama visited Ground Zero together. Obama and McCain entered the site. But while McCain took the time to shake hands with uniformed firefighters and a construction worker with an American flag helmet, Obama ignored them and stood around. But he wasn’t done yet. Both McCain and Obama brought roses to place on the makeshift 9/11 memorial. Obama casually tossed his...
  • Living with humans has taught dogs morals, say scientists

    08/21/2008 6:11:16 AM PDT · by Alex Murphy · 63 replies · 183+ views
    The Daily Mail UK ^ | 21st August 2008 | Daily Mail Reporter
    Dogs are becoming more intelligent and are even learning morals from human contact, scientists claim. They say the fact that dogs' play rarely escalates into a fight shows the animals abide by social rules. During one study, dogs which held up a paw were rewarded with a food treat. When a lone dog was asked to raise its paw but received no treat, the researchers found it begged for up to 30 minutes. But when they tested two dogs together but rewarded only one, the dog which missed out soon stopped playing the game. Dr Friederike Range, of the University...
  • Adolescent Cruelty

    07/23/2008 8:55:14 AM PDT · by Revski · 39 replies · 111+ views
    YouTube ^ | 7/23/08 | Revski
    This is an animated video of a dove that we see in most back yards. As a child, I with a slingshot, 22 rifle and 12 gage shot gun, killed many kinds of birds just for sport, to see if I could aim good and bring the little creature to the ground. I didn’t kill for food but in adolescent behavior. It is so cruel and for this reason I created this video to show and teach the cruelty of this kind of behavior.
  • Dog Breeds Rated for Feistiness

    06/26/2008 10:18:39 AM PDT · by Oyarsa · 146 replies · 155+ views
    Discovery.com ^ | June 26, 2008 | Jennifer Viegas
    June 26, 2008 -- Little dogs -- think Chihuahuas and Dachshunds -- tend to be feisty, while certain breeds, like Golden and Labrador Retrievers, are as mellow as their reputations suggest, found a new study that identified the most and least aggressive common dog breeds.